"This show represents anything you could ever possibly want to see in your lifetime. You can travel to different countries. You can go back in time and pick up something that belonged to a Russian czar or maybe something that belonged to British royalty, maybe something that belonged to your great grandfather, you never know," said Laurie Green with the Baltimore Summer Antiques Show.

This year, there are more than 500 vendors from 30 countries with goods for sale with everything from furniture to jewelry, silver goods and even an original Van Gough painting.

The most expensive thing at the show is a 10-carat rare fancy blue diamond ring. It costs $9.8 million, but not everything at the show is this expensive.

"You can find trinkets from a $100 to like you saw $10 million diamonds to everything in between," Green said.

The show usually draws a crowd, not just from Baltimore, but from metropolitan areas along the East Coast, like New York, Philadelphia and Washington and the patrons are the reason some vendors keep coming back.

"It's very broad. The crowds are tremendous. We usually get an incredible amount of people. It's a very large show, so we sell things to very inexpensive to very expensive pieces," said Bill Rau with M.S. Rau Antiques.

"It's really delightful to see because they just come and they're all eyes all over the place and then they sort of focus in," said Bev Norwood of Norwood Spirit of America.

Bev and Doug Norwood live in Timonium and sell their American folk art at the show every year. They encourage everyone to come see what the show has to offer.

"You're going to see anything and everything when you come to this show. With so many diverse and very different international and national dealers, you'll find anything you want at this show. You may have to look a little bit but a treasure is always worth finding," Bev Norwood said.